Portrait of Thomas Hood by Unknown Artist (National Portrait Gallery.date:unknown)
Hood's Comic Poems (Little Stour Books.1870)
Para-textual Information
Date: 1870
Cover: Blue with golden printed insignia "The Pocket Series, Hood's Comic Poems, Moxon"
Spine: Blue with golden decoration "The Pocket Series, Hood's Comic Poems, Moxon"
Illustrations:There is one illustration which is the authors portrait on the backside of the third page. The illustrator was J.H. Baker.
Preface: The preface in this book was written by “Thomas Hood the Younger” (1835-1874) who was born in Lake House, Wanstead, Essex to Thomas Hood (1799-1845) and Jane, Reyonlds (1791-1846). In the preface he describes Thomas Hood seniors character as a person and as a prolific writer. It is fitting that his son would write about him as he had an inside look into his father’s character and inspiration. A shocking element of Hood’s life that is revealed by his son is that he was an “invalid” during much of his career, and yet “could supply mirth for millions while he himself was propped up with pillows on the bed of sickness” (vi). This period of time apparently gave Hood time to reflect on the extent of suffering of others, and thus the nature of his comedy was of a “well-balanced mind to avoid infliction of pain” (vi). made to Victorian Poetry as whole. The preface was written after Hood's death in May of 1845. In this way the preface serves as a eulogy or way to inform readers of Hood's significant contributions to Victorian poetry. Included in the preface by Hood’s son is part of a pervious preface T. Hood himself wrote from his book, "Hoods Own.” This addition from the T. Hood helps further contextualize his personal views regarding his writing process.
UVIC call number: PR4796C6
Textual Information
Type of Poems: Comic and Lyrical
Author Bio: (From Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, see Works Cited)
“Hood, Thomas (1799–1845),poet and humorist, was born on 23 May 1799 at 31 Poultry, London. His father, also Thomas Hood (1759–1811), bookseller and publisher, was a Scot from Tayside. His mother, Elizabeth Sands (d. 1821), came from a well-known London family of engravers. Hood was the third of six children, the second of two sons. The family moved to Islington, then pleasantly rural. Hood attended a dame-school in Tokenhouse Yard and, later, Dr Wanostracht's Alfred House Academy in Camberwell. When Hood was twelve both his father and brother died and he moved to a modest day school run by an elderly Scot, afterwards gratefully remembered. By fourteen he was working in a City office but became ill and, possibly apprenticed to his uncle Robert Sands, or Le Keux, began to learn engraving. When his health deteriorated in 1815 he was sent north to relatives in Dundee, where he stayed for about two years. He was already writing prose and verse and contributing anonymously to local papers.
Hood returned to London in the autumn of 1817, much improved in health. He was busy engraving, working from home, and he joined a literary society. In one of his entertaining letters he wrote in 1821: ‘Truly I am T. Hood Scripsit et sculpsit—I am engraving and writing prose and Poetry by turns’ (Hood, 27). 1821 was a year of mixed fortune. His mother died. That summer, however, Taylor and Hessey (Keats's publishers) took over theLondon Magazineafter the death of its editor in a duel. John Taylor had worked for Hood's father and invited the young Thomas to become sub-editor. Hood was in his element: ‘I dreamt articles, thought articles, wrote articles … The more irksome parts of authorship, such as the correction of the press, were to me labours of love’ (Jerrold, 99). His career as a literary journalist had begun.
Apart from a novel,Tylney Hall(1834), some unremarkable prose, and minor writing for the stage, nearly all Hood's work, verse and prose, first appeared in magazines and annuals catering for the growing middle-class market. From 1821 to 1845 Hood was closely involved, as contributor or editor, with many of them, particularly theLondon Magazine,The Athenaeum,The Gem, theNew Monthly Magazine, andPunch. He wrote—and illustrated, inventing visual puns—a series ofComic Annuals(1830–9), collected his magazine contributions intoWhims and Oddities(1826 and 1827) andWhimsicalities(1844), and also publishedHood's Magazine(1844–5). Hood wrote for a living, and was keenly alive to contemporary life and popular taste. His work provides insight into domestic reading and the development of periodical publishing in the first half of the nineteenth century.
As a young man at theLondon Magazine, Hood found himself ‘in rare company’: among the contributors were Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, Thomas De Quincey, and his own contemporary, Keats's friend John Hamilton Reynolds. His ‘Literary reminiscences’ inHood's Own(1839) contain lively descriptions of the principal figures of the Romantic movement. Lamb became his mentor. In 1825 he collaborated with Reynolds in a successful volume of light satirical verse,Odes and Addresses to Great People, and published what Lamb termed his Hogarthian etching,The Progress of Cant. On 5 May 1825 he married Reynolds's sister Jane (1791–1846).
Hood's appearance accords oddly with his destined role of literary buffoon and laughter-maker: slight, unassuming, dressed in black, with what he himself on several occasions called ‘a Methodist face’ (Hood, 348). The Hoods settled at 2 Robert Street, Adelphi, London. Lamb's poem ‘On an Infant Dying as Soon as Born’ mourned their first child, but a daughter, Frances (1830–1878) [seeBroderip, Frances Freeling], was born soon after they moved to Winchmore Hill; and, after they moved in 1832 to Lake House, Wanstead, a son,Tom Hood (1835–1874), was born; he was to follow his father's profession. Although constantly worried about money and health, the Hoods were a devoted, affectionate family asMemorials of Thomas Hood(1860), based on his letters and compiled by his children, testifies.
In the year Tom was born the Hoods faced financial ruin. Hood, happy in family and friends, inept or unfortunate in business dealings, invested in a publishing venture that failed. To economize and pay his debts the family moved to Koblenz in 1835; they remained in Europe for five years, the last three in Ostend. Hood worked on courageously although chronically ill. His rheumatic heart condition became much worse and he returned to London in 1840 to the care of his own doctor. The family lived first in various lodgings, finally settling at Devonshire Lodge, New Finchley Road, St John's Wood. Briefly, when he was editor of theNew Monthly Magazine(1841–3), Hood's financial position improved, but became precarious again when he initiated a lawsuit over copyright (settled favourably after his death). One of Thackeray'sRoundabout Papersgives a touching recollection of this ‘true genius and poet’ at this time. In 1844 several of his fellow writers, distressed by his financial hardship and rapidly deteriorating physical condition, petitioned Peel to grant him a civil-list pension; it was settled on his wife. Hood died at his London home, Devonshire Lodge, on 3 May 1845, his wife on 4 December 1846. He was buried on 10 May. In 1854 a memorial, paid for by public subscription, was erected over their grave in Kensal Green cemetery.
Hood had endeared himself to the reading public. Although his early Keatsian collection of serious verse,The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies(1827), was not well received, much in the volume was distinctive: some of the shorter poems, ‘I remember, I remember’, ‘Silence’, and ‘Ruth’, for example, have a haunting quality that places them in many anthologies. The light-hearted banter and agile puns ofOdes and Addresses, however, sold well. Hood, as he frequently said, became ‘a lively Hood for a livelihood’. Years of inventive comic verse followed, its boisterous fun and terse puns uncongenial to later tastes. It does, however, exhibit Hood's extraordinary technical virtuosity in handling form, metre, and language. Here Hood is wholly individual, ‘major’ not ‘minor’, as W. H. Auden judged: ‘like nobody but himself and serious in the true sense of the word’ (Auden, 17).
Hood was never wholly clown. Light and dark coexist in his world, and often a crude reality punctures the hilarious. He wrote sombre ballads such asThe Dream of Eugene Aram(1829), and tender lyrics such as ‘The Death Bed’. ‘The Haunted House’ and ‘The Elm Tree’ share contemporary taste for the macabre. Hood preferred laughter to preaching as a vehicle for social criticism: before Dickens or Thackeray the serialized, manic history ofMiss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg(1840–41) attacked with comic vigour society's vulgar display of wealth. HisOde to Rae Wilson(1837) reacted sharply to attacks on his levity, revealing the generous humanitarian impulses behind his writing: love of his fellow men, compassion, a tolerant non-sectarian Christianity, and a strong preference for a cheerful philosophy of life. Hood spoke out early against slavery, campaigned for a copyright law, and drew attention to the poor, the rejected, the oppressed, those exploited, and those harshly judged in the midst of Victorian prosperity.
Near his death Hood engaged the hearts and consciences of his readers directly in a number of poems prompted by real incidents: ‘The Song of the Shirt’ (Punch, Christmas 1843) highlighted the plight of the underpaid seamstresses of the day; in 1844 ‘The Workhouse Clock’ addressed the hardship of the poor laws; ‘The Lay of the Labourer’, the suffering of the agricultural poor. ‘The Bridge of Sighs’, the purest poem of these public verses, sprang from a newspaper report of a suicide.
In his short life Hood saw ‘Romantic’ change into ‘Victorian’: he took tea with Wordsworth, dined with Dickens. Hood's work mirrors this change. Much of his writing has intrinsic merit; some is memorable, its range impressive, its style often forward-looking, and all is valuable to anyone concerned with the transitional period, literary and social, which it reflects.”
Arrangement: The book begins with a long narrative poem, “Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg” which is 99 pages long, while the remaining poems are short in length in comparison. Due to no dates being attributed to any of the poems, it seems the only primary arrangement consideration was putting the longer poem at the beginning of the book.
Poems Included: “Faithless Sally Brown”, “Ben Buff”, “I’m Going to Bombay”, “Love”, and “No!”
No!
No sun--no moon!
No morn--no noon!
No dawn--no dusk--no proper time of day--
No sky--no earthly view--
No distance looking blue--
No road--no street--no "t'other side this way"--
No end to any Row--
No indications where the Crescents go--
No top to any steeple--
No recognitions of familiar people--
No courtesies for showing 'em--
No knowing 'em!
No traveling at all--no locomotion--
No inkling of the way--no notion--
"No go" by land or ocean--
No mail--no post--
No news from any foreign coast--
No Park, no Ring, no afternoon gentility--
No company--no nobility--
No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,
No comfortable feel in any member--
No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,
No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds--
November!
(Hood.350)
Short Analysis of "No!":
The poem titled “No!” in this particular collection, "The Pocket Series, Hood's Comic Poems” was titled “November” in previous publications by Edward Moxon and company, such as in their third volume of “The Works of Thomas Hood” (Cummings Study Guide.Web). The variation in the title of the poem between editions is logical because both the refrain “no” and the pun “November” are memorable aspects of the poem. The poem was written by Thomas Hood in 1844 (Cummings Study Guide.Web). The poem is set in London on a rainy, foggy, and smoggy day, where everything was hidden from site. According to the Lonely Planet Weather2Travel London has on average 21 days of rain during the 30 days of November, which amounts to an average of 2 hours of sunshine per day in November. It is not only objects, celestial bodies, and the physical landscape which Thomas Hood is indicating he can’t see but also things such as social “recognitions of familiar people” and “news from any foreign coast.” This lack of visible action both outside and socially gives the poem a feeling of stillness, as there are literally “no” things to see. The park and ring he is speaking of is either referring to Hyde or Regency Park in London where, on a nice afternoon, gentility would gather and socialize. Although the setting of the poem is bleak Hood gives the poem levity and playfulness by using repetition, exaggeration, and an extended pun. Each line begins with “no” which builds up to the final one word line at the end of the poem, “November.” The poem contains rhyming couplets in lines 1-2, 4-5, 7-8, 9-10, 11-12, 16-17, and 18-19. In addition, Line 3 rhymes with line 6, line 20 with 22, and line 21 with 24. A rhyming triplet occurs in lines 16, 17, and 18. Anaphora is a rhetorical device that consists of repeating a word or series of words at the beginning of neighboring clauses to thereby lend the clauses emphasis. This device is used throughout the poem at beginning of the lines and within some lines with the use of “no.” Alliteration, a repetition of consonant sounds occurs frequently in the poem, such as in line 22, “no shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees.” The use of the alliteration in these instances gives the poem a building rhythmic momentum which musically carries the readers attention to the final pun at the end.
Works Cited
Hood, Thomas. The Comic Poems of Thomas Hood. New Edition ed. London: Moxon, 1870. Print. The Pocket Ser.
Cummings, Michael J. "November: A Study Guide." Cummings Study Guides. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
Jerrold, Walter. Thomas Hood: His Life and times. New York: Greenwood, 1969. Print.
Broderip, Frances Freeling. Memorials of Thomas Hood. London: Moxon, 1869. Print.
Hood, Thomas, and Epes Sargent. The Complete Poetical Works of Thomas Hood: With a Biographical Sketch and Notes. Boston: Phillips, Sampson, 1857. Print.
Digital Images
Thomas Hood. N.d. National Portrait Gallery, London. Thomas Hood Wikipedia. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
Digital image. Little Stour Books, N.p.. n.d. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
Para-textual InformationDate: 1870
Cover: Blue with golden printed insignia "The Pocket Series, Hood's Comic Poems, Moxon"
Spine: Blue with golden decoration "The Pocket Series, Hood's Comic Poems, Moxon"
Illustrations:There is one illustration which is the authors portrait on the backside of the third page. The illustrator was J.H. Baker.
Preface: The preface in this book was written by “Thomas Hood the Younger” (1835-1874) who was born in Lake House, Wanstead, Essex to Thomas Hood (1799-1845) and Jane, Reyonlds (1791-1846). In the preface he describes Thomas Hood seniors character as a person and as a prolific writer. It is fitting that his son would write about him as he had an inside look into his father’s character and inspiration. A shocking element of Hood’s life that is revealed by his son is that he was an “invalid” during much of his career, and yet “could supply mirth for millions while he himself was propped up with pillows on the bed of sickness” (vi). This period of time apparently gave Hood time to reflect on the extent of suffering of others, and thus the nature of his comedy was of a “well-balanced mind to avoid infliction of pain” (vi). made to Victorian Poetry as whole. The preface was written after Hood's death in May of 1845. In this way the preface serves as a eulogy or way to inform readers of Hood's significant contributions to Victorian poetry. Included in the preface by Hood’s son is part of a pervious preface T. Hood himself wrote from his book, "Hoods Own.” This addition from the T. Hood helps further contextualize his personal views regarding his writing process.
UVIC call number: PR4796C6
Textual Information
Type of Poems: Comic and Lyrical
Author Bio: (From Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, see Works Cited)
“Hood, Thomas (1799–1845), poet and humorist, was born on 23 May 1799 at 31 Poultry, London. His father, also Thomas Hood (1759–1811), bookseller and publisher, was a Scot from Tayside. His mother, Elizabeth Sands (d. 1821), came from a well-known London family of engravers. Hood was the third of six children, the second of two sons. The family moved to Islington, then pleasantly rural. Hood attended a dame-school in Tokenhouse Yard and, later, Dr Wanostracht's Alfred House Academy in Camberwell. When Hood was twelve both his father and brother died and he moved to a modest day school run by an elderly Scot, afterwards gratefully remembered. By fourteen he was working in a City office but became ill and, possibly apprenticed to his uncle Robert Sands, or Le Keux, began to learn engraving. When his health deteriorated in 1815 he was sent north to relatives in Dundee, where he stayed for about two years. He was already writing prose and verse and contributing anonymously to local papers.
Hood returned to London in the autumn of 1817, much improved in health. He was busy engraving, working from home, and he joined a literary society. In one of his entertaining letters he wrote in 1821: ‘Truly I am T. Hood Scripsit et sculpsit—I am engraving and writing prose and Poetry by turns’ (Hood, 27). 1821 was a year of mixed fortune. His mother died. That summer, however, Taylor and Hessey (Keats's publishers) took over the London Magazine after the death of its editor in a duel. John Taylor had worked for Hood's father and invited the young Thomas to become sub-editor. Hood was in his element: ‘I dreamt articles, thought articles, wrote articles … The more irksome parts of authorship, such as the correction of the press, were to me labours of love’ (Jerrold, 99). His career as a literary journalist had begun.
Apart from a novel, Tylney Hall (1834), some unremarkable prose, and minor writing for the stage, nearly all Hood's work, verse and prose, first appeared in magazines and annuals catering for the growing middle-class market. From 1821 to 1845 Hood was closely involved, as contributor or editor, with many of them, particularly theLondon Magazine, The Athenaeum, The Gem, the New Monthly Magazine, and Punch. He wrote—and illustrated, inventing visual puns—a series of Comic Annuals(1830–9), collected his magazine contributions into Whims and Oddities (1826 and 1827) and Whimsicalities (1844), and also published Hood's Magazine (1844–5). Hood wrote for a living, and was keenly alive to contemporary life and popular taste. His work provides insight into domestic reading and the development of periodical publishing in the first half of the nineteenth century.
As a young man at the London Magazine, Hood found himself ‘in rare company’: among the contributors were Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, Thomas De Quincey, and his own contemporary, Keats's friend John Hamilton Reynolds. His ‘Literary reminiscences’ in Hood's Own (1839) contain lively descriptions of the principal figures of the Romantic movement. Lamb became his mentor. In 1825 he collaborated with Reynolds in a successful volume of light satirical verse, Odes and Addresses to Great People, and published what Lamb termed his Hogarthian etching, The Progress of Cant. On 5 May 1825 he married Reynolds's sister Jane (1791–1846).
Hood's appearance accords oddly with his destined role of literary buffoon and laughter-maker: slight, unassuming, dressed in black, with what he himself on several occasions called ‘a Methodist face’ (Hood, 348). The Hoods settled at 2 Robert Street, Adelphi, London. Lamb's poem ‘On an Infant Dying as Soon as Born’ mourned their first child, but a daughter, Frances (1830–1878) [see Broderip, Frances Freeling], was born soon after they moved to Winchmore Hill; and, after they moved in 1832 to Lake House, Wanstead, a son, Tom Hood (1835–1874), was born; he was to follow his father's profession. Although constantly worried about money and health, the Hoods were a devoted, affectionate family as Memorials of Thomas Hood (1860), based on his letters and compiled by his children, testifies.
In the year Tom was born the Hoods faced financial ruin. Hood, happy in family and friends, inept or unfortunate in business dealings, invested in a publishing venture that failed. To economize and pay his debts the family moved to Koblenz in 1835; they remained in Europe for five years, the last three in Ostend. Hood worked on courageously although chronically ill. His rheumatic heart condition became much worse and he returned to London in 1840 to the care of his own doctor. The family lived first in various lodgings, finally settling at Devonshire Lodge, New Finchley Road, St John's Wood. Briefly, when he was editor of the New Monthly Magazine (1841–3), Hood's financial position improved, but became precarious again when he initiated a lawsuit over copyright (settled favourably after his death). One of Thackeray'sRoundabout Papers gives a touching recollection of this ‘true genius and poet’ at this time. In 1844 several of his fellow writers, distressed by his financial hardship and rapidly deteriorating physical condition, petitioned Peel to grant him a civil-list pension; it was settled on his wife. Hood died at his London home, Devonshire Lodge, on 3 May 1845, his wife on 4 December 1846. He was buried on 10 May. In 1854 a memorial, paid for by public subscription, was erected over their grave in Kensal Green cemetery.
Hood had endeared himself to the reading public. Although his early Keatsian collection of serious verse, The Plea of the Midsummer Fairies (1827), was not well received, much in the volume was distinctive: some of the shorter poems, ‘I remember, I remember’, ‘Silence’, and ‘Ruth’, for example, have a haunting quality that places them in many anthologies. The light-hearted banter and agile puns of Odes and Addresses, however, sold well. Hood, as he frequently said, became ‘a lively Hood for a livelihood’. Years of inventive comic verse followed, its boisterous fun and terse puns uncongenial to later tastes. It does, however, exhibit Hood's extraordinary technical virtuosity in handling form, metre, and language. Here Hood is wholly individual, ‘major’ not ‘minor’, as W. H. Auden judged: ‘like nobody but himself and serious in the true sense of the word’ (Auden, 17).
Hood was never wholly clown. Light and dark coexist in his world, and often a crude reality punctures the hilarious. He wrote sombre ballads such as The Dream of Eugene Aram (1829), and tender lyrics such as ‘The Death Bed’. ‘The Haunted House’ and ‘The Elm Tree’ share contemporary taste for the macabre. Hood preferred laughter to preaching as a vehicle for social criticism: before Dickens or Thackeray the serialized, manic history of Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg (1840–41) attacked with comic vigour society's vulgar display of wealth. His Ode to Rae Wilson (1837) reacted sharply to attacks on his levity, revealing the generous humanitarian impulses behind his writing: love of his fellow men, compassion, a tolerant non-sectarian Christianity, and a strong preference for a cheerful philosophy of life. Hood spoke out early against slavery, campaigned for a copyright law, and drew attention to the poor, the rejected, the oppressed, those exploited, and those harshly judged in the midst of Victorian prosperity.
Near his death Hood engaged the hearts and consciences of his readers directly in a number of poems prompted by real incidents: ‘The Song of the Shirt’ (Punch, Christmas 1843) highlighted the plight of the underpaid seamstresses of the day; in 1844 ‘The Workhouse Clock’ addressed the hardship of the poor laws; ‘The Lay of the Labourer’, the suffering of the agricultural poor. ‘The Bridge of Sighs’, the purest poem of these public verses, sprang from a newspaper report of a suicide.
In his short life Hood saw ‘Romantic’ change into ‘Victorian’: he took tea with Wordsworth, dined with Dickens. Hood's work mirrors this change. Much of his writing has intrinsic merit; some is memorable, its range impressive, its style often forward-looking, and all is valuable to anyone concerned with the transitional period, literary and social, which it reflects.”
Arrangement: The book begins with a long narrative poem, “Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg” which is 99 pages long, while the remaining poems are short in length in comparison. Due to no dates being attributed to any of the poems, it seems the only primary arrangement consideration was putting the longer poem at the beginning of the book.
Poems Included: “Faithless Sally Brown”, “Ben Buff”, “I’m Going to Bombay”, “Love”, and “No!”
No!
No sun--no moon!
No morn--no noon!
No dawn--no dusk--no proper time of day--
No sky--no earthly view--
No distance looking blue--
No road--no street--no "t'other side this way"--
No end to any Row--
No indications where the Crescents go--
No top to any steeple--
No recognitions of familiar people--
No courtesies for showing 'em--
No knowing 'em!
No traveling at all--no locomotion--
No inkling of the way--no notion--
"No go" by land or ocean--
No mail--no post--
No news from any foreign coast--
No Park, no Ring, no afternoon gentility--
No company--no nobility--
No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,
No comfortable feel in any member--
No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,
No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds--
November!
(Hood.350)
Short Analysis of "No!":
The poem titled “No!” in this particular collection, "The Pocket Series, Hood's Comic Poems” was titled “November” in previous publications by Edward Moxon and company, such as in their third volume of “The Works of Thomas Hood” (Cummings Study Guide.Web). The variation in the title of the poem between editions is logical because both the refrain “no” and the pun “November” are memorable aspects of the poem. The poem was written by Thomas Hood in 1844 (Cummings Study Guide.Web). The poem is set in London on a rainy, foggy, and smoggy day, where everything was hidden from site. According to the Lonely Planet Weather2Travel London has on average 21 days of rain during the 30 days of November, which amounts to an average of 2 hours of sunshine per day in November. It is not only objects, celestial bodies, and the physical landscape which Thomas Hood is indicating he can’t see but also things such as social “recognitions of familiar people” and “news from any foreign coast.” This lack of visible action both outside and socially gives the poem a feeling of stillness, as there are literally “no” things to see. The park and ring he is speaking of is either referring to Hyde or Regency Park in London where, on a nice afternoon, gentility would gather and socialize.
Although the setting of the poem is bleak Hood gives the poem levity and playfulness by using repetition, exaggeration, and an extended pun. Each line begins with “no” which builds up to the final one word line at the end of the poem, “November.” The poem contains rhyming couplets in lines 1-2, 4-5, 7-8, 9-10, 11-12, 16-17, and 18-19. In addition, Line 3 rhymes with line 6, line 20 with 22, and line 21 with 24. A rhyming triplet occurs in lines 16, 17, and 18. Anaphora is a rhetorical device that consists of repeating a word or series of words at the beginning of neighboring clauses to thereby lend the clauses emphasis. This device is used throughout the poem at beginning of the lines and within some lines with the use of “no.” Alliteration, a repetition of consonant sounds occurs frequently in the poem, such as in line 22, “no shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees.” The use of the alliteration in these instances gives the poem a building rhythmic momentum which musically carries the readers attention to the final pun at the end.
Works Cited
Hood, Thomas. The Comic Poems of Thomas Hood. New Edition ed. London: Moxon, 1870. Print. The Pocket Ser.
Flint, Joy. "Article: Hood, Thomas." Oxford DNB. Oxford University Press. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
Cummings, Michael J. "November: A Study Guide." Cummings Study Guides. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
Jerrold, Walter. Thomas Hood: His Life and times. New York: Greenwood, 1969. Print.
Broderip, Frances Freeling. Memorials of Thomas Hood. London: Moxon, 1869. Print.
Hood, Thomas, and Epes Sargent. The Complete Poetical Works of Thomas Hood: With a Biographical Sketch and Notes. Boston: Phillips, Sampson, 1857. Print.
Digital Images
Thomas Hood. N.d. National Portrait Gallery, London. Thomas Hood Wikipedia. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
Digital image. Little Stour Books, N.p.. n.d. Web. 15 Feb. 2016.
E.M. Eng. 386. UVIC. Winter 2016.